By Fr. George Dorbarakis
1. The honorable and holy head of John the Forerunner, which had long been hidden, has now come forth from the bosom of the earth like gold from the mines, enclosed not in a jar as before, but in a silver vessel, found in a sacred place and revealed by a priest. This head, which glorious Constantinople, the Queen of Cities, received from Comana together with the faithful emperor, her shepherd, and the faithful people, she welcomes with great rejoicing; and after all had venerated it with deep faith, they placed it in a holy place.
2. A very beautiful image of the relationship between Saint John the Forerunner and Jesus Christ, presented to us in the hymnography of today’s feast, is that of the voice in relation to the Word: “Having become the voice of the Word… O heavenly man and Forerunner” (Ode I). Saint John is thus presented, on the basis of the actual events of his life, as the one who reveals the presence of Christ, who proclaims with a mighty voice, so that all may hear, the coming of the Messiah.
2. A very beautiful image of the relationship between Saint John the Forerunner and Jesus Christ, presented to us in the hymnography of today’s feast, is that of the voice in relation to the Word: “Having become the voice of the Word… O heavenly man and Forerunner” (Ode I). Saint John is thus presented, on the basis of the actual events of his life, as the one who reveals the presence of Christ, who proclaims with a mighty voice, so that all may hear, the coming of the Messiah.








